November 22, 2008

Booting Linux in 5 seconds

Filed under: Online by Branko Collin @ 6:03 pm

Two Dutch Linux developers working for Intel in Santa Clara, USA, demonstrated a fast-starting version of Linux at the Linux Plumbers Conference in Oregon (also USA) last September. Arjan van de Ven, developer at Intel’s Open Source Technology Center and author of PowerTOP, and Auke Kok, an OSTC colleague, built their FastBoot system by moving important modules into the kernel (less overhead), and by scrapping less important modules altogether. The latter are ran when necessary. For example, the printing sub-system is only loaded when the user first tries to print something.

Arjan van de Ven told Webwereld that he had started the FastBook-project because he was irritated with the time his recently bought and very fast laptop needed to boot.

“We used a method that was entirely different from what everybody else had been trying before us.” Instead of shaving off a second here or there, the two developers set themselves a firm goal: five seconds, and no cheating. For them that meant the CPU and disk had to be idle after those first five seconds, and not continue loading stuff in the background while the system pretended to be done.

The FastBoot developers think an even faster boot sequence is possible. “We should be able to achieve only 4 seconds on a netbook with Atom and a ‘slow’ SSD. We already managed 3 seconds on a Core 2 laptop with a fast SSD, and we think we should be able to boot such a fast machine in perhaps 2 seconds,” Van de Ven continues.

Van de Ven figures Microsoft are working on similar technology for its own operating system, Windows, but also thinks his competitors have a unique set of challenges: “It’s harder for them to get things working, because they have a lot of legacy code. But that’s not a fundamental limitation, and they can put a lot of people on such a project.”

See also Booting Linux in five seconds at LWN.net. Photo of an Asus EEE by Chris Birchill, some rights reserved.

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November 21, 2008

Dutch researcher discovers a new species of penguin

Filed under: Animals by Orangemaster @ 9:58 am
Opus

Together with her team, researcher Sanne Boessenkool discovered a never before found species of penguin, the Waitaha penguin in New Zealand, which has been extinct for an estimated 500 years and is named after the very first inhabitants of the country.

Besides obtaining her Ph.D., the goal of the research was to provide the threatened yellow-eyed penguin with a better chance of survival. “While researching, we noticed that some bones where genetically different than those of the yellow-eyed penguin. Later, we also noticed that the bones were smaller and had a different structure,” explains Boessenkool.

The cartoon penguin here is Opus from one of my favourite comic strips, Bloom County. The person posting comments under the name Lola Granola, once Opus’ fiancee, surely knows what I’m on about. Opus is a large-nosed penguin with a herring addiction who lost track of his mother during the Falklands War.

(Link: trouw.nl, Wikipedia)

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November 20, 2008

Buried alive

Filed under: General by Branko Collin @ 9:18 am

A gravedigger in Laren, Noord Holland, was buried alive last Tuesday when an excavated pile of sand fell back into the hole he was standing in. Two of his colleagues managed to escape the impromptu burial, Blik op Nieuws reports, but it took firemen half an hour to extract the third, a 50-year-old man from nearby Hilversum. Afterwards the man was transported to a hospital by an ambulance with what appeared to be light injuries.

Photo: Salem graves by by Alanna Ralph, some rights reserved.

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November 19, 2008

Twenty-five percent wakes up with the Internet

Filed under: Food & Drink,General by Branko Collin @ 9:46 am

A quarter of the Dutch goes onto the Internet right after waking up in the morning, even before going to the toilet or drinking coffee. (Coffee is the other national addiction.) A study from KPN also shows that 8% of the Dutch consider a day without Internet wasted, says Webwereld. Some 58% of the Dutch even feel a sense of panic coming up after two days offline.

Me, I’ve got one of them old-fashioned steam powered computers that takes a minute or so to start up, so that’s the ideal pee and coffee break. And at the end of the day…

Photo by E-magic, some rights reserved.

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November 18, 2008

Spontaneous street art

Filed under: Art by Orangemaster @ 6:26 pm
Cups

I took the tram today because it was raining and when I stepped out of the tram in Amsterdam I saw these two cups, glued to a traffic pole. I wonder how long they will stay there.

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Happy Lefties Soul Connection break

Filed under: Music by Orangemaster @ 11:26 am

All this talk of recession, lack of pride, populism and people really needing to hear something positive made me decide to hijack this space today for a music video featuring Dutch funksters Lefties Soul Connection. I know there’s some fans out there!

After all, we need a break! So here’s Lefties Soul Connection with “Fais do do” (French for “go to bed”).

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November 17, 2008

Tiger Woods has Dutch ancestry, but do we care?

Filed under: General,Weird by Orangemaster @ 11:26 am
passport1.jpg

I have no idea why this happens or why this is considered news, but there’s this ‘game’ the print media plays every once in a while which I call “Find the Dutch person” (“Zoek de Nederlander”). Allow me to explain.

Way back when Britney Spears was on the straight and narrow, Dutch Daily De Gelderlander had an article that read something like “Britney Spears has Dutch blood” and went on to explain she had ‘family’ in the province of Gelderland on her father’s side and that made her one fourth Dutch. This was seen as a source of pride.

Then right after Estonia won the Eurovision Songfestival in 2001, the papers said the win was “half Dutch” because Dave Benton was born on the island of Aruba, part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. This came off more like envy because the Netherlands’ last win in the Songfestival dates back to 1975.

And today, popular Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf reports that Tiger Woods has Dutch blood because he is – get ready for this – one eighth Dutch! And apparently he’s really proud of being ‘multicultural’ too. He’s about as ‘African-American’ as Barack Obama is. That was sarcasm.

What’s wrong with the Dutch people ‘we’ (you) already have? As a Canadian, I go out of my way to point out that someone is Canadian or else they will be classified as American or French. Back in 1996 De Telegraaf called actor Leslie Nielsen American and sometime around 2004 some Flemish exhibition centre boasted about the great American singer Neil Young. I couldn’t let that last one slide.

Although there are tons of great Dutch people, islands and all who are surely a source of pride, I just cannot understand this identity soul searching. Even Anne Frank was seen a source of Dutch pride although she was German, while the growing amount of populists in the Netherlands are still not sure any Dutch person with a second passport qualifies.

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November 16, 2008

Free University in Berlin honours Cees Nooteboom

Filed under: Dutch first,Literature by Orangemaster @ 3:19 pm
Cees Nooteboom

Cees Nooteboom is the very first Dutch writer to receive an honorary degree from a German university, the Free University in Berlin. He is one of the Netherlands’ greatest authors, having won a string of literary awards and one day expected to win the Nobel Prize for literature.

Oddly enough, he is more popular in Germany where he is very much in demand. In the Netherlands, Nooteboom is a successful writer, but it is said that he will never become as popular in the Netherlands as he is in Germany where almost all his books are bestsellers. Nooteboom’s German publisher Suhrkamp has just published his complete works in nine volumes, while the Bezige Bij publishing house in Amsterdam has no plans to do the same.

According to Radio Netherlands, the Dutch are more likely to name Harry Mulisch as being up for the Nobel Prize for Literature.

I can’t help but say “No man is a prophet in his own country”.

(Link: radionetherlands.nl)

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November 15, 2008

Electro-magnetic suspension makes cars zoom

Filed under: Automobiles,Science by Eric @ 2:43 pm

If it’s up to doctoral student Laurenţiu Encică, cars of the future will zoom by on electro-magnetic suspension. This system shall replace the combination of shock absorbers and springs used in today’s cars, which is cheap, but not optimal.

Encică’s reseach focused on using a combination of permanent magnets and electro-magnetic coils. The permanent magnets provide passive suspension, much like the good old mechanical suspension system. The electro-magnetic coils add an active component to the mix, allowing the system to respond to changing road conditions much faster than current systems.

Don’t expect Encică’s electro-magnetic suspension to be under your car any time soon, though. Measuring about 20 by 80 centimeters, the prototype he built is still a bit too bulky to fit under an average car and further research will be neccessary to make the design smaller and less energy consuming. Encică expects it will take another five to ten years for his system to hit the road.

(Link: TUE, Photo: Quasimondo)

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De(con)struction of a country

Filed under: Religion by Branko Collin @ 2:36 pm

The Christian government’s War on Fun is plodding along at a glacial pace here. This can make it difficult to get a decent picture of how bad things have gotten. Luckily, over at the Yak’s forums, somebody who calls themselves DutchLlama has provided a list of battles lost and about to be lost:

One thing DutchLlama forgot is the ban on flags in the inner city of Amsterdam, as these make the city look too cheerfulcommercial according to some politicos.

I should point out that although all of these bans are right up the alley of the Reformed government (the Reformed are a protestant sect), the measures taken in Amsterdam can likely be subscribed to nimbyism, as they’re often based on decisions taken by the council of the city center borough.

Yak is the pseudonym of brilliant games programmer Jeff Minter, the guy who almost single-handedly brought the concept of author’s voice to the video game world, and kept it there against great opposition.

Via Cloggie. Photo of the spire of the Westerkerk by Mararie, some rights reserved.

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